Thanks for visting Simply The Nest. I'm an English girl married to an Portuguese boy, and when I'm not working or taking care of our two adorable daughters, I blog about our house renovation, DIY projects, delicious recipes, inspirational interiors, and family life in a Victorian Manchester nest.

At a loose end yesterday, I decided to tackle the magazine mountain that had been lurking under our coffee table for er, quite some time (I feel compelled to confess that the pile included the Rooney wedding edition of Hello magazine, and it wasn't even at the bottom of the pile).

Among this magazine mountain I discovered The Best Magazine In The World Ever - also known as a genuine 1965 edition of Brides magazine - also known as the best present I've ever been given (by Andre, natch), bar none:

Andre presented me with this vintage treasure when I was busy planning our wedding (yes, I'm using the singular. I planned our wedding. Andre turned up. Bless him). Now, naturally I do not intend to start waxing lyrical about weddings on this blog (well, until July, when our two-year wedding anniversary comes up, and therefore I'm reserving the right in advance to inundate you with photos of handmade invitations, handmade bunting, handmade floral arrangements, handmade seating plan, and so on - c'mon, we put a marquee over our entire garden, respect must be paid).

However, what's fascinating about 1965 Brides is the focus on setting up home. I'd say half the magazine is dedicated to planning the wedding, and the other half to living happily ever after. The last time I picked up a modern wedding magazine I don't seem to recall any articles on the latter - plenty of information on dressing like a princess, and choosing a super-expensive honeymoon - but the happily ever after part? Not so much. Change in priorities, anyone? OK, OK, most people already live together these days, but it would be nice to see a little bit more of a focus on the 99.99% part of your married life, rather than the 0.01% that constitutes The Big Day, right?

Here's the contents page - with around 100 pages of articles about setting up your first home:

The articles themselves are priceless - here's one on choosing the style for your first home:

And here's another on 'the man in your kitchen', which opens thus...

"He's yours - you married him - and you think you know everything about him. Until this dashing stranger steps into your kitchen and proceeds to make himself happily at home, cooking up a storm or, anyway, his own special dish." AWESOME:

My favourite parts of the magazine are actually the adverts - check out this beauty for Bassett furniture:

Precious. But my all time favourite is this splendid advert for sterling sliver: